Unity Government

These military and diplomatic moves coincide with an international push to persuade various factions within Libya to form a new unity government. The new government is intended to replace the two governments already vying for control: the internationally recognised government, the House of Representatives, based in Tobruk in the northeast, and the General National Congress, based in Tripoli in the northwest. It appears that once the unity government is installed, it will call for security assistance which will then give legal cover for strikes against ISIS.

The UN-brokered deal to set up a unity government, signed at Skhirat in Morocco in December, created a Presidential Council – based in Tunisia – which will form a Government of National Accord. However, this week the House of Representatives the current recognised government has rejected the new government put forward by the Presidential Council. This has caused huge consternation and there will now be enormous pressure brought to bear to ensure they back down and accept a new government.

However, even if the moves to form a new unity government fail (and there is then no subsequent call for security assistance) it is likely that US would still push for military intervention. Last week General Joseph Dunford, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, reiterated the need for “decisive military action” against ISIS in Libya. The Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni, while arguing that the forming of a unity government was still the priority, signalled that even if this failed military action should take place:

“If in a few months we will sombrely have to admit that the Libyans have renounced this scenario then surely an anti-Isis coalition such as the one in Iraq and Syria will have to be formed…”

Drones over Derna

Although the push for military intervention in Libya against ISIS has ratcheted up since the Paris attacks, US military operations have been on-going in Libya, with US drones flying over the country since the end of the NATO intervention. In 2013, the Libyan government reportedly came under “intense American pressure” to allow drones strikes against Al Qaeda in the east of the country. Although permission was refused, drone surveillance flights continued and the US has recently been seeking to locate its drones nearer to Libya so they can have even more time over the country. Last year, photographs purporting to show a crashed Predator drone in Libya circulated on social media and US military reported one of its had drones ditched in the Mediterranean after it encountered problems flying on “a mission in Africa.”

Last year the US launched two bombing raids in Libya to kill specific individuals. In June, two US F-15 flew from the UK on a mission to kill Mokhtar Belmokhtar, an Algerian veteran jihadist. The F-15s dropped “multiple 500-pound bombs” on a building outside the Libyan town of Ajdabiya, reportedly killing seven men in the strike but leaving Belmokhtar alive. In November– coincidentally on the same day as the ISIS attack in Paris – a further bombing raid targeted Abu Nabil, named as the ISIS leader in Libya. In December, photographs of US Special Forces arriving at Wattiya airbase in Libya appeared. The Pentagon confirmed the deployment but stated (apparently with a straight face) that the US forces had subsequently left Libya “to avoid conflict”

Insanity

Einstein’s aphorism as to the insanity of doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results undoubtedly applies to the US military interventions in Iraq and Libya. The actions to topple Saddam Hussein and Mummar Gaddafi, supposedly to enhance the safety and security of their populations and the world beyond, failed spectacularly.

Rather than accepting the failure of military intervention, it’s argued that the Iraq mission failed because western forces stayed too long, while the Libya mission failed because western forces did not stay long enough. The denials and buck-passing by those responsible (witness the recent cross-examination of former British ministers about the 2011 Libyan intervention and its disastrous aftermath by the Foreign Affairs Select Committee) is embarrassing.

No one doubts the real threat of ISIS to the people of Iraq, Libya and beyond. Yet no one can doubt that ISIS was in part created by the US intervention in Iraq (as even arch-military interventionist Tony Blair accepts) and had no presence in Libya before the NATO intervention of 2011.

The alternative to such military intervention is to undertake real and lasting political change that addresses the underlying problem of global political and economic inequality which feeds terrorism and insecurity. But calls for such structural changes are rejected and resisted by those who benefit from the current system, in favour of ‘bombing the bad guys’ – lidism as Professor Paul Rogers rightly describes it. Such a strategy, as we have seen over the past 25 years does far more harm than good. And is only likely to do so again.

2 replies

I am sick of this sort of wilful ignorance. I refer to the gratuitous blindness and stupidity of this article’s author. Bombing Libya is not a mistake. The people behind this do not expect different results. Western imperialism benefits from the genocidal destruction of Libya as a nation and Libyans as a people.
The irony is that Cole is claiming that the warmongers display “Einsteinian insanity”, but it is he and others like him that are repeating the same old stale, cowardly faux-critiques and expecting that somehow this time it will make a difference. If you want to stop this violence you need to really confront the deliberate systematic nature of these crimes.
In applying this discourse of “catastrophe” “tragedy” and “fiasco” to UK acts of genocide (and I use that term advisedly) Cole is following down a path well trodden by cowardly “critics” of US mass murders dating back to when they killed millions of Vietnamese, Cambodians and Laotians. It is a cowardly and crypto-racist way of adopting the appearance of condemnation without challenging chauvinist Western self-image of civilisation and benevolent intent.
These acts of destruction and destabilisation are systematic and purposive imperialist acts designed to foment social, political, cultural, and economic disintegration. This is why I have spent years trying to inform people that these acts should be categorised as genocide, because that is what the term was originally coined to describe. It also fits the legal definition given in the United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. You can find the text of the convention with a web search and Raphael Lemkin’s original definition of genocide is reprinted at my blog here [http://ongenocide.com/axis-rule-chapter-9/]. You cannot hope to end these crimes if you refuse to open your eyes to their fundamental nature.
If you continue to promulgate the notion that Western mass violence is a wrongheaded strategic error then you are complicit in the crimes of Empire. You are the ultimate bulwark against exposing the intentional and rational nature of the crimes of Empire. If the intentionality and underlying genocidal logic are not exposed than the crimes will continue. Each will have it’s own different rationalisation and instead of discussing the systematic Imperial logic of the ongoing series of bloody interventions, each new push for armed intervention will be debated according to criteria chosen by the warmongers – be it WMD, ISIS, humanitarian intervention, or whatever. If you win the argument and prevent a given intervention, it will only be temporary.
Continuing with this line of the “failure of military intervention” is an act of complicity with imperialist crimes. It shows a desire to appear to oppose and to critique, but a cowardly failure to confront reality. Cole and Drone Wars UK are betraying themselves as much as anyone else. I write this with great anger and frustration, but I would not bother if I did not think that the people reading this might have their minds changed, and that those readers might include Cole, or people from Drone Wars UK, or the people at SWC who reposted this article.

Welcome

Drone Wars UK provides information and comment on the growing use of armed drones. As we are based in the UK we focus on the use of British drones but also include information about armed drones in general.